Russia Quotes
Russia: Its People and Its Literature
by
Emilia Pardo Bazán9 ratings, 3.67 average rating, 1 review
Russia Quotes
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“A nation which receives a culture ready made, and not elaborated by itself, condemns itself to intellectual sterility; at most it can only hope to imitate well.”
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
“Regent, Boris Godonof, riveted the chains of slavery upon the wrists of many millions of human beings in Russia.”
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
“Like a stripped and lifeless trunk the Oriental church produces no theologians, thinkers, or savants.”
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
“The government makes use of the clergy as of one arm more, which, however, is now almost powerless through corruption. The Oriental church has no conception of the noble devotion which has honored Catholicism in the lives of Saint Thomas of Canterbury and Cardinal Cisneros. The”
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
“Mercenariness, pride, routine, and indolence are the capital sins of the Russian office-holder, and the first has so strong a hold upon him that the people say, "To make yourself understood by him you must talk of rubles;" adding that in Russia everybody robs but Christ, who cannot because his hands are nailed down.”
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
“And what great thing have you done?" asked the peasant. "We? Oh, nothing." "Then to the oven!" he replied. The”
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
“Spain also suffered an invasion of a foreign race, but she pulled herself together and sustained herself on a war-footing for seven centuries.”
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
“Russia was suddenly invaded by the Mongols, and, like locusts in a corn-field, those hideous and demoniacal foes fell upon her and made all Christendom tremble, so that the French historian Joinville records it as a sign of the coming of Antichrist. "For our sins the unknown nations covered our land," say the Russian chroniclers.”
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
“But even more aggravating to the Russian is the Jewish usurer, who since the Middle Ages has fastened himself like a leach upon producer and consumer, and who, if he does not borrow or lend, begs; and if he does not beg, carries on some suspicious business. A nation within a nation, the Jews are sometimes made the victims of popular hatred; the usually gentle Russians sometimes rise in sudden wrath, and the newspapers report to us dreadful accounts of an assault and murder of Hebrews. Russian”
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
― Russia: Its People and Its Literature
